This Week in Auto Racing Feb. 16 - 17

Daytona Beach, FL (Sports Network) - Speedweeks 2013 at Daytona International
Speedway kicks off this weekend, with The Sprint Unlimited preseason race
scheduled for Saturday and then qualifying for the Daytona 500 slated for
Sunday.

Saturday night's Sprint Cup Series preseason race at Daytona International
Speedway will be more than just a preview of the Feb. 24 Daytona 500.

The Sprint Unlimited -- formerly known as the Budweiser Shootout -- will mark
the competition debut of the new Generation-6 car in Sprint Cup. This non-
points event will also have a different format than the past, as race fans are
determining the competition elements of it.

Even though Sprint Cup teams have tested the Gen-6 at Charlotte Motor Speedway
twice and Daytona once during the offseason, there are still some unknowns
about the new car.

NASCAR officials expect speeds to reach up to or over 200 mph, and they are
optimistic that pack racing will be the dominant form of competition at
Daytona. However, bump drafting could be a major concern if drivers opt to do
it. Each of the three auto manufacturers in NASCAR's top series -- Chevrolet,
Ford and Toyota -- have designs on the new cars that are different from the
most recent ones used in the sport from 2007-12. Drivers noticed a significant
difference in the designs while bump drafting during testing at Daytona.

A multi-car wreck occurred during the second day of testing at Daytona when
Marcos Ambrose spun around in a pack of 18 cars after Dale Earnhardt Jr. was
attempting to bump draft Ambrose on the backstretch. Twelve of the 18 cars
riding in the pack at the time were involved in the accident.

One year ago, NASCAR made some modifications to the cars and implemented new
rules which helped bring back the big drafts and reduce the number of two-car
tandems at restrictor-plate tracks (Daytona and Talladega Superspeedway).
Drivers, teams and NASCAR were all pleased with the return of pack racing.

"We're still drafting, just not lining up pushing each other," three-time
Sprint Cup champion Tony Stewart said. "I never liked the pushing deal anyway.
There's no other form of racing where you do that, so I don't know why it's
been so embraced here, because to me, it's not really racing.

"It's having two cars line up, and one guy pushes the other guy. I don't know
where that really fits into auto racing. I don't think it's a bad thing if the
bumpers don't line up. I never was a fan of cars pushing each other in the
first place, and if they don't, if we can't do it at Daytona, it's not going
to hurt my feelings."

For the first time in the history of the preseason race at Daytona, fans are
deciding the format.

In a fan vote that closed on Wednesday at 11:59 p.m. ET, the three segments
for this scheduled 75-lap race were set at 30 laps, 25 and 20. The other two
options for the segment lengths included: 40 laps, 20 and 15 or 35 laps, 30
and 10.

Fans still have an opportunity to vote on two other elements of the race. They
have until the green flag drops for the start of the event to vote for the
type of pit stop each team must make following the first segment (30 laps).
The options include: no pit stop, two-tire change or four-tire change. Fans
also have until the start of the second segment to vote for the number of cars
that will be eliminated after the 25 laps are completed in that stint. The
choices are: none, two, four or six.

Votes for the remaining two categories can be cast on NASCAR's new mobile app,
NASCAR Mobile '13, or at NASCAR.com/SprintUnlimited.

Furthermore, fans in attendance at Daytona on race day will be able to
determine the starting lineup. They will have three choices when voting:
number of career wins (most to least), 2012 final Sprint Cup driver point
standings or order in which drivers won their first pole position last season,
beginning with the Daytona 500 and ending with last November's race at
Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Nineteen drivers are entered in The Sprint Unlimited. There are 22 drivers
eligible for the race. Those qualified are the pole winners from last season
or past champions of the preseason event at Daytona. A.J. Allmendinger, Bill
Elliott and Ken Schrader have eligibility but are not on the entry list.

Kyle Busch won last year's race. Busch bounced back from two near wrecks and
then beat Stewart to the finish line by 0.013 seconds, making it the closest
margin in the history of this event.

"I think anytime we ever go down to Daytona, whether it's with the new car or
whether it's with a different rules package or what have you, we always look
at that Sprint Unlimited race as a race to watch to see exactly what's going
to happen and what characteristics you have in your race car and things,"
Busch said. "It's a learning experience for everybody, whether you're in the
race or whether you're out of the race and not in it."

Stewart has won the preseason race at Daytona three times (2001, '02 and '07).
How does he feel about his chances of winning it for a fourth time?

"I think they're good," Stewart said. "It's a fun race anyway, and to get the
fans involved and make them more a part of the actual format and everything, I
like it."

Dale Earnhardt holds the record for most wins in this race with six (1980,
'86, '88, '91, '93 and '95).

Qualifying for the Daytona 500 -- NASCAR's most prestigious race of the season
-- is a unique format. Just the first two starting positions for the Feb. 24
season-opening event will be determined during Sunday's time trials. The
remainder of the 43-car field will be decided in the Feb. 21 twin-qualifying
races (Budweiser Duel).

There are 45 drivers listed on the preliminary entry list for this year's
Daytona 500.

The top-two finishers in time trials and the highest 15 finishers in each
Budweiser Duel, excluding those who had already secured a spot on the front
row, will earn a spot in the Daytona 500. The next four fastest in time trials
that did not finish in the top-15 in either one of the twin qualifiers will
make up positions 33-36. Six provisional starting positions (37 through 42)
will be awarded to the highest eligible car owners in the final 2012 Sprint
Cup standings, not otherwise qualified for the race. The 43rd position will be
filled by the most recent past series champion who participated in a Sprint
Cup race this past year. Should no past champion be eligible, the final
position will go to the next highest owner in last year's points.

No driver has ever won all four major Speedweeks events at Daytona -- The
Sprint Unlimited, Daytona 500 pole, Budweiser Duel and Daytona 500. Cale
Yarborough (1984), Ken Schrader (1989) and Dale Jarrett (2000) have won three
of the four events.